On Thu, Apr 11, 2013, Richard Hopkins wrote:
In older contra dances, danced duple or triple proper, same-sex
right-and-left-through moves are common -- that is, a R and L through
started from a position where two men are facing two women. Through
the folk process, we have largely abandoned that practice, and either
don't call those dances or call them much modified. There may be a
number of reasons for this, but I think likely part of it has been
discomfort with the same-sex interaction in that move. The folk
process can take us in any number of directions.
I'll note that same-sex discomfort doesn't necessarily lead to the
results one might expect. Square dancing is IME far more conservative
about gender than contra dancing, yet I see same-sex R and L thru in my
recent dancing.
OTOH, square dancers have in the past two-three decades been moving very
strongly toward "dancing by definition", which is what drives calling
these unusual moves.
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